It could simply be room modal - this will not go away no matter where you
place the sub. Your only hope would be to add plenty of bass traps and EQ
down the peaks to make the trough relatively less big.
It also may be caused by your speakers - as the bass is omnidirectional it will
reflect off the wall behind the speakers. You get quarter wave cancellation
across the entire room.
Are your speakers on when you make this test? Or is it just the sub playing?
Just in case - perhaps I should explain what you should do with speakers...
You should try to avoid middle ground - either place your speakers within 1 M of a wall or more than 2.2 M to help reduce this problem. there are formulas to work out at what frequency you will get cancellation - remember this applies to the ENTIRE room. I put my large full range speakers into a soffit mount - only this way you can completely eliminate the problem - that is what studios do. I leave my surround satellites within two feet from the wall (they roll off at 60 Hz).
I quote from Genelec
The cancellation frequency is Fc = C / 4 * D.
D= Distance from front baffle of speaker to rear wall behind speaker.
C= 344 Meters/sec
Fc is in Hz.
In your case a suckout at 45 Hz equates to a Distance of 1.9 meters. And 70
Hz equates to a distance of 1.2 Meters. If your Europa speakers are in
between these two limits then it could well explain your problem. Typically
this yields a 20 db suckout. Most people have this problem as they use large
full range free standing speakers. Since most people ignore it - even a 20 db
suckout - as bad as it seems - is it not likely to ruin your enjoyment of music.
Sometimes other room modes can compensate at the listening position.
Hopefully you can see that speaker position can be important too - not just
the sub.
place the sub. Your only hope would be to add plenty of bass traps and EQ
down the peaks to make the trough relatively less big.
It also may be caused by your speakers - as the bass is omnidirectional it will
reflect off the wall behind the speakers. You get quarter wave cancellation
across the entire room.
Are your speakers on when you make this test? Or is it just the sub playing?
Just in case - perhaps I should explain what you should do with speakers...
You should try to avoid middle ground - either place your speakers within 1 M of a wall or more than 2.2 M to help reduce this problem. there are formulas to work out at what frequency you will get cancellation - remember this applies to the ENTIRE room. I put my large full range speakers into a soffit mount - only this way you can completely eliminate the problem - that is what studios do. I leave my surround satellites within two feet from the wall (they roll off at 60 Hz).
I quote from Genelec
For large loudspeakers, with very
low cut-off frequency (Active 3-way and Large systems), placed away from
the wall the necessary distance is far too long for any practical rooms. The
conclusion is that large loudspeakers should not be placed free-standing but
flush-mounted to perform in the best possible way.
The cancellation frequency is Fc = C / 4 * D.
D= Distance from front baffle of speaker to rear wall behind speaker.
C= 344 Meters/sec
Fc is in Hz.
In your case a suckout at 45 Hz equates to a Distance of 1.9 meters. And 70
Hz equates to a distance of 1.2 Meters. If your Europa speakers are in
between these two limits then it could well explain your problem. Typically
this yields a 20 db suckout. Most people have this problem as they use large
full range free standing speakers. Since most people ignore it - even a 20 db
suckout - as bad as it seems - is it not likely to ruin your enjoyment of music.
Sometimes other room modes can compensate at the listening position.
Hopefully you can see that speaker position can be important too - not just
the sub.